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calling or profession, but the act now in question, as construed by the parties and counsel, is not within the scope of the powers intrusted to the General Assembly.

The judgment is reversed.

Judgment reversed.

(No. 11170.-Reversed and remanded.)

THE PEOPLE ex rel. Daniel B. Stewart, Appellant, vs. THE HIGHWAY COMMISSIONERS OF THE TOWN OF ANCHOR, Appellees.

Opinion filed June 21, 1917-Rehearing denied October 5, 1917.

This case is controlled by the decision in People v. Highway Comrs. 279 Ill. 542.

APPEAL from the Circuit Court of McLean county; the Hon. SAIN WELTY, Judge, presiding.

CHARLES L. CAPEN, and BARRY & MORRISSEY, for appellant.

LIVINGSTON & BACH, and STERLING & WHITMORE, (SIGMUND LIVINGSTON, and W. W. WHITMORE, of counsel,) for appellees.

Mr. JUSTICE CRAIG delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellant, Daniel B. Stewart, filed his petition for a writ of mandamus in the circuit court of McLean county against appellees, the highway commissioners of the town of Anchor, to compel them, as such highway commissioners, to enter an order reducing the width of the highway from 60 feet to 40 feet where it passes across his land immediately adjoining the village of Anchor. Appellant's land immediately adjoins the platted portions of the village of Anchor, an unincorporated village. The highway in question is a width of 80 feet where it passes through the platted portion of the village and 60 feet in width

where it passes across the portion of the land owned by appellant on which he seeks to have the width of the road reduced. The total length of the strip of highway in controversy is approximately one-half mile. The petition alleges that on May 1, 1916, appellant presented his petition in due form of law to the highway commissioners of such township praying for a reduction in the width of the highway from 60 feet to 40 feet across that portion of his land which immediately adjoins the village of Anchor and that on the same day the highway commissioners entered an order denying the prayer of the petition. The petition for mandamus prays that the writ issue directing appellees to set aside and revoke their former order denying the prayer of his petition for the narrowing of the road and that they be required to enter an order reducing the width of the highway to 40 feet, as prayed in said petition. Appellees answered the petition for mandamus, setting up certain matters in confession and avoidance of the allegations of the petition, to which a general demurrer was interposed and overruled. Appellant elected to abide by his demurrer, and the court entered judgment on the demurrer and dismissed the petition. This appeal followed.

The only question presented for our consideration is the sufficiency of the matters alleged in the answer to bar appellant of the relief asked. The first defense interposed is that the highway is only a portion of a highway which enters the village of Anchor; that it is the only thoroughfare running through the village, in which the streets are 80 feet in width, and that to narrow the road as asked would make a jog in the same and congest the traffic, so that it is wholly impracticable to reduce the width thereof. The second defense is, that the highway commissioners have made valuable and permanent improvements along the highway, which has been graded and fixed so as to be adaptable only for a road of the width of 60 feet, and along which ditches have been constructed and in use since Feb

ruary 23, 1901. The third and fourth grounds urged are, that on May 9, 1901, pursuant to a proper petition to the highway commissioners, the highway in question was laid out and the commissioners entered into a contract with appellant, who was the then owner of the lands now used for said highway, by which they purchased the lands so used for $625, appellant reserving the privilege of mining coal beneath the surface of the land, and that by reason of such fact appellant is estopped from asking to have the road narrowed to 40 feet. The fifth defense interposed is, that the highway within the village is 80 feet in width, the rest of the highway being 60 feet in width; that the roadway occupies a width of 25 feet of such highway, and that the unoccupied portion is and has been used for the purpose of grading up the traveled portion, to construct ditches and drains, and to get materials to fill up and keep the roadway free from hollows and depressions caused by the constant wear of vehicles, the washing away of the surface, etc., and that to reduce the same in width to 40 feet would leave practically nothing for this purpose and put the highway commissioners to a great and constant expense in transporting the necessary filling from time to time required to re-build, re-grade and re-surface the traveled roadway.

Substantially the same matters of defense were interposed in People v. Highway Comrs. 279 Ill. 542, and we there held the same not sufficient to bar appellant of the relief asked. The reasons which sustain the conclusions there reached are fully stated in the opinion in that case and it would serve no good purpose to re-state them here. For the reasons there given the demurrer to the answer should have been sustained.

The judgment of the circuit court must be reversed and the cause remanded to that court, with directions to sustain a demurrer to appellees' answer.

Reversed and remanded.

(No. 11299.-Decree affirmed.)

GEORGE A. BRINKMAN, Appellant, vs. CHARLES H. BOWLES et al. Appellees.

Opinion filed June 21, 1917-Rehearing denied October 18, 1917.

1. ELECTIONS-election contest is regarded as a chancery proceeding. A proceeding to contest an election is to all intents and purposes a chancery proceeding, and except as otherwise provided by statute is governed by the rules of chancery.

2. PRACTICE—when section 81 of Practice act does not apply. Section 81 of the Practice act, authorizing a judge who did not hear the case to sign a bill of exceptions under certain circumstances, does not apply to ordinary chancery suits nor to a proceeding to contest an election, even though its terms include certificates of evidence.

APPEAL from the Circuit Court of Cook county; the Hon. JESSE A. BALDWIN, Judge, presiding.

MICHAEL COSTABILE, (I. T. GREENACRE, and STEDMAN & SOELKE, of counsel,) for appellant.

WINSTON, PAYNE, STRAWN & SHAW, (EDWARD W. EVERETT, E. B. CRESAP, and WILLIAM A. BOWLES, of counsel,) for appellee Charles H. Bowles.

Mr. JUSTICE FARMER delivered the opinion of the court: This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Cook county in a suit brought by the appellant, George A. Brinkman, against Charles H. Bowles and Dennis K. Lindhout, to contest the election of a judge of the city court of Chicago Heights, Cook county, at an election held September 7, 1915. Brinkman was a candidate on what was known as the Home ticket, Bowles on the Judicial Republican ticket and Lindhout on the Republican ticket. The petition alleges that more than 1100 women voted for the candidates for said office at said election, and that a canvass of the returns showed Bowles received a plurality of the total men and women votes and that Brinkman received a plurality

of the men votes. Bowles was declared elected and a commission issued to him. The petition filed by Brinkman to contest the election alleged that women were not legal voters at said election for the office of judge of the city court; that they were illegally allowed to vote and their votes counted; that of the men votes, who were the only legal voters at said election, petitioner received 858 votes, Bowles 823 votes and Lindhout 270 votes in the seven wards of the city; that he received 35 more men votes than Bowles, the next highest candidate, and that he was duly elected to said office of judge of the city court of Chicago Heights.

The city court of Chicago Heights was established pursuant to a vote of said city in 1903. In 1910 the territory known as the seventh ward of said city was annexed to the city, and the petition alleges that the residents of said ward were not legal voters at the election for city judge held in September, 1915, and the votes of residents of said ward should not have been counted. Bowles received a plurality of both the men and women votes in said ward. If the votes of residents of that ward were not counted it would increase the plurality claimed by Brinkman to 76. The petition also alleges that mistakes and errors were made in counting the ballots; that votes were counted for Bowles which were cast for and should have been counted for petitioner; that votes of persons not qualified electors were counted for Bowles, and that many other unlawful and erroneous acts were committed by the judges in counting the ballots and certifying to the returns, and that said returns were incorrect, incomplete, erroneous, and did not show the correct number of votes cast for the respective candidates. The petition alleges that the city council, sitting as a canvassing board, canvassed the returns, declared Bowles elected and a certificate of election was issued to him. The petition alleges Brinkman received more legal votes than either of the other candidates and was lawfully elected judge of the city court of Chicago Heights. Bowles answered the petition and Lindhout was defaulted. At the

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